Community Card Game · Split Pot · Omaha High / Badugi Low · Blinds
Overview
Omahugi splits the pot between the best Omaha high hand and the best Badugi low hand. The Omaha high half uses exactly 2 hole cards + 3 community cards (standard Omaha rule). The Badugi low half uses exactly 2 hole cards + 2 community cards — a 4-card Badugi hand evaluated with Badugi rules (all 4 suits different, aces low, no rank pairs, lowest wins).
Watch a Sample Hand
Hero wins Omaha High; P3 wins the Badugi half.
POT: $40
YOU (Hero)
BADUGI WIN!
Player 2
HIGH WIN!
Player 3
Ready to Deal
Press Next Step to begin dealing the sample hand.
Step 0 of 5
How It Works
The pot splits between two winners:
Omaha High Half: Best 5-card hand using exactly 2 hole cards + 3 community cards.
Badugi Half: Best 4-card Badugi hand using exactly 2 hole cards + 2 community cards. All 4 cards must be different suits and different ranks. Aces are low. Lowest hand wins. A 4-card Badugi beats any 3-card Badugi.
You may use different hole-card combinations for your Omaha hand and your Badugi hand.
Badugi Ranking Review
4-card Badugi (all 4 suits present) beats any 3-card Badugi
Among 4-card Badugis, compare from the highest card down — lowest wins
A-2-3-4 rainbow is the best possible Badugi
If you can't make a 4-card Badugi (rank/suit conflicts reduce it), compare your best 3-card Badugi
The Badugi qualifier here is 4-card only (all 4 suits required in the 2+2 pool)
Strategy Tips
Suited hole cards are bad for Badugi — rainbow hands maximize your Badugi potential
Low-rank, rainbow hands (A-2-3-4 spread across suits) are the ultimate Omahugi hands
Pairing your hole cards with community cards of different suits and different ranks is key to 4-card Badugis
Strong Omaha High hands often use high cards — which are terrible for Badugi; plan which half to target